Page:Vol 2 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/74

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54
RAIDS ALONG THE SOUTH SEA.

his protection the colonists began actively to engage in mining. With Cortés' departure for Honduras, and the consequent disorders at Mexico, the king again took alarm, and sought to restrict the coming of the settlers, though no serious difficulties occurred.[1]

One of the most alluring pieces of information brought by the many embassies which tendered homage at the feet of the victor was the existence of a great sea to the south-west. The report thereof roused in Cortés a series of tumultuous feelings, intensified by the dazzling result of Vasco Nuñez' famous discovery. Visions arose of pearl and spice islands, of long extended shores cut by Pactolean streams, of the veiled Indies, of a strait to the south or north through which the fleets of Spain should bear away the prize of Oriental trade, and enrich her people — this and more dreamt the great conqueror as he figured himself the laurel-crowned hero of the age.[2]

The first attempt to gather information about the sea appears to have been through the two Spaniards who accompanied the Michoacan envoys to their country. Immediately after, two small parties were despatched to the south and south-west, one of them reaching the sea of Tehuantepec, each taking possession for the king and church, planting there the cross. The rumor had preceded them of the achievements of white men in overthrowing the feared Aztecs, and everywhere the explorers received marked attention, proof of the same being brought to Mexico in costly presents of gold and pearls, and in specimens of choice

  1. Alluding to these objections, Contador Albornoz urges the arrest of the king and his supporters. Carta, in Pacheco and Cárdenas, Col. Doc., xiii. 71-2; Icazbalceta, Col. Doc., i. 502-3. This restriction is probably at the bottom of the statement in Alegre, Hist. Comp. Jesus, i. 89, that all traces of a rich mine discovered in 1525 were soon after lost. This may be identical with the 'sierra de plata' of the royal cédula in Puga, Cedulario, 24. 'Y siempre quedaron amigos,' is Herrera's concluding allusion to Tangaxean. dec. iii. lib. iii. cap. xvii.;
  2. 'Y estaba muy ufano, porque me parecia que en la descubrir se hacia á V. M. muy grande y seiialado servicio.' Cortés, Cartas, 259.